In the UK, you can now buy Easter-themed chocolate dinosaurs at both Aldi and Marks & Spencer source

Metahub posted a list of the best and worst dinosaurs in Jurassic World Alive source

The dinosaur of the day: Nodosaurus

Ankylosaur that lived in the Late Cretaceous in what is now North America

Herbivorous

Estimated to be about 13 to 20 ft (4 to 6 m) long

Had bony plates on the top of its body, and may have had spikes on the side of its body

Bony plates were like bands, alternating between narrow and wide bands over the ribs

The wider bands were also covered in bony knobs

Had a short neck and a long, stiff tail (no club)

Had a small, narrow head, pointed snout, small teeth, and powerful jaws

Had five toes on each foot

Had powerful forelimbs

Named in 1889 by Othniel Charles Marsh (very brief description)

Richard Swan Lull gave a more detailed description in 1921

Lull also described flat scutes, spines, and plates, though he did not illustrate them

Carpenter and Kirkland revisited the description in 1998

In 2015, a 4-year-old boy, Wylie Brys found what’s thought to be a Nodosaurus fossil in Mansfield, Texas. He and his father Tim were looking around behind a shopping center. At first they thought it was s turtle fossil. They reached out to Southern Methodist University and worked with them to excavate the area

Type species is Nodosaurus textilis

Name means “knobbed lizard”

Species name refers to the texture near the head (small ossifications in quadrangular form, arranged in rows. Marsh said “The external surface is perculiarly marked by a texture that appears interwoven, like a coarse cloth. This has suggested the species name.”

Nodosaurus is the type genus for the nodosaurid group

Two groups in Ankylosauria: nodosaurids and ankylosaurids

Nodosaurids are usually more primitive, and they don’t have tail clubs, and generally skulls are not as short or broad as ankylosaurids, and the skulls were not covered in scutes

Can see Nodosaurus in the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs (a.k.a. Normanpedia), illustrated by John Sibbick in 1889

Can also see Nodosaurus in the Land Before Time series (appears in the 3rd movie, as a character named Nod)

Can also see Nodosaurus in the game Jurassic World Evoution (unlock via the Hammond Foundation when you complete the Science Division’s mission on Isla Tacaño. Model is based on Borealopelta

Fun Fact:
For the tyrannosaur linneage to evolve from Moros interpidus size to T. rex size they would have needed to grow about 4 grams per generation.S